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portada Keeping the People's Liberties: Legislators, Citizens, and Judges as Guardians of Rights (en Inglés)
Formato
Libro Físico
Idioma
Inglés
N° páginas
272
Encuadernación
Tapa Blanda
Dimensiones
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm
Peso
0.37 kg.
ISBN13
9780700631476

Keeping the People's Liberties: Legislators, Citizens, and Judges as Guardians of Rights (en Inglés)

John J. Dinan (Autor) · University Press of Kansas · Tapa Blanda

Keeping the People's Liberties: Legislators, Citizens, and Judges as Guardians of Rights (en Inglés) - Dinan, John J.

Libro Físico

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Origen: Estados Unidos (Costos de importación incluídos en el precio)
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Reseña del libro "Keeping the People's Liberties: Legislators, Citizens, and Judges as Guardians of Rights (en Inglés)"

Which branch of government should be entrusted with safeguarding individual rights? Conventional wisdom assigns this responsibility to the courts, on the grounds that liberty can only be protected through judicial interpretation of bills of rights. In fact it is difficult for many people even to conceive of any other way that rights might be protected. John Dinan challenges this understanding by tracing and evaluating the different methods that have been used to protect rights in the United States from the founding until the present era. By examining legislative statutes, judicial decisions, convention proceedings, and popular initiatives in four representative states--Massachusetts, Virginia, Michigan, and Oregon--Dinan shows that rights have been secured in the American polity in three principal ways. Throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, rights were protected primarily through representative institutions. Then in the early twentieth century, citizens began to turn to direct democratic institutions to secure their rights. It was not until the mid-twentieth century that judges came to be seen as the chief protectors of liberties. By analyzing the relative ability of legislators, citizens, and judges to serve as guardians of rights, Dinan's study demonstrates that each is capable of securing certain rights in certain situations. Elected representatives are generally capable of protecting most rights, but popular initiatives provide an effective mechanism for securing rights in the face of legislative intransigence, and judicial decisions offer a superior means of protecting liberties in crisis times. Accordingly, rather than viewing rights protection as the peculiar province of any single institution, this task ought to be considered the proper responsibility of all these institutions. By undertaking a comparison of these institutional methods across such a wide expanse of time, Keeping the People's Liberties makes a highly original contribution to the literature on rights protection and provides a new perspective on debates about the contemporary role of representative, populist, and judicial institutions.

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